A step in the right direction…
SLAPPs are a scourge on journalism. This week a government taskforce had its inaugural meeting.
SLAPPs are a scourge on journalism. This week a government taskforce had its inaugural meeting.
This week, Impress, a press regulator, wrote to the major political parties raising concerns over political campaign materials disguised as newspapers.
A trial began last week at Southwark Crown Court of three men accused of running a major fraud operation over the course of more than a decade.
The Conservative Party’s campaign tactics have been branded “appalling” by one of Britain’s most renowned photojournalists after imitating a shuttered local newspaper to garner votes.
The Independent Press Standards Organisation has launched its Guidance on Reporting of Sex and Gender Identity for editors and journalists.
The Conservative Party in the UK has agreed to drop a media charge for journalists covering its upcoming October party conference.
The NMA has welcomed the peers’ recommendation to maintain the judicial review standard for appeals in Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Bill.
ABC has been named as the first UK certifier for the Journalism Trust Initiative.
Industry owned auditor ABC has completed a methodology audit for Q83, an Australian based tech company delivering transparent reporting for the social media and influencer marketing industry.
A broad coalition has called on Rishi Sunak to unleash the full potential of the UK’s digital economy by maintaining a robust and flexible appeals process in the new regime for digital markets.
An amendment offering specific protections in law for journalists and individuals at risk of being targeted by SLAPPs is expected to be added to the Economic Crime Bill today (13 June 2023).
Concerns expressed about legislation to ensure big tech negotiate with news publishers for the value of trusted content are unfounded, a new paper published by the News Media Association has said.
The second independent external review of IPSO has found the regulator has “influenced the industry for the better”.
The NMA has responded to the publication of The Digital Markets, Competition and Consumer Bill.
IPSO’s Complaints Committee has been joined by Ted Young, former Metro editor, who brings editorial experience of mass market newspapers.
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